"Psychology's reform movement has called for improving research methods. Experimentology provides the blueprint. Frank and colleagues provide an accessible, comprehensive, and practical overview for rigorous experimentation. This remarkable book will bring students right to the forefront of experimental methodology."
&mdash Brian Nosek, Department of Psychology, University of Virginia
&ldquo Many lecturers struggle with the question of how to teach their students the nuts and bolts of the modern, open science approach to experimentation. This book provides the perfect answer."
&mdash Eric-Jan Wagenmakers, Department of Psychological Methods, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
"Experimentology is absolutely stunning and a pleasure to read. It covers all aspects of experimentation in the behavioral sciences, from foundations over statistics to planning, execution, and reporting. It describes and fosters the set of practices, findings, and approaches that enable the construction of robust, precise, and generalizable experiments. The book is unique and precious there is nothing like it. It is both introductory and sophisticated it combines depth with accessibility and is as philosophical as it is practical. Conceived in the spirit of open science, it provides the conceptual and methodological framework for overcoming the replication crisis in psychology. The more behavioral scientists who read this book, the better for psychology and behavioral sciences in general."
&mdash Dr. Ulman Lindenberger, Professor of Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development
&mdash Brian Nosek, Department of Psychology, University of Virginia
&ldquo Many lecturers struggle with the question of how to teach their students the nuts and bolts of the modern, open science approach to experimentation. This book provides the perfect answer."
&mdash Eric-Jan Wagenmakers, Department of Psychological Methods, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
"Experimentology is absolutely stunning and a pleasure to read. It covers all aspects of experimentation in the behavioral sciences, from foundations over statistics to planning, execution, and reporting. It describes and fosters the set of practices, findings, and approaches that enable the construction of robust, precise, and generalizable experiments. The book is unique and precious there is nothing like it. It is both introductory and sophisticated it combines depth with accessibility and is as philosophical as it is practical. Conceived in the spirit of open science, it provides the conceptual and methodological framework for overcoming the replication crisis in psychology. The more behavioral scientists who read this book, the better for psychology and behavioral sciences in general."
&mdash Dr. Ulman Lindenberger, Professor of Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development